Kentish Poets. A series of writers in English poetry, natives or residents in the county of Kent; with specimens of their compositions and some account of their lives and writings. By R. F.1821 |
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الصفحة x
... kind of exhibition does not occur at any regular periods , for the play is not divided into acts . Our modern managers appear to have recurred to practices something similar , and have in their late revivals of the neglected plays of ...
... kind of exhibition does not occur at any regular periods , for the play is not divided into acts . Our modern managers appear to have recurred to practices something similar , and have in their late revivals of the neglected plays of ...
الصفحة 5
... kind called platonic love , " an innocent but a dangerous friendship . " It was the practice of the poets of that age , a practice borrowed from the example of their master Petrarch , to single out some object to whom they might address ...
... kind called platonic love , " an innocent but a dangerous friendship . " It was the practice of the poets of that age , a practice borrowed from the example of their master Petrarch , to single out some object to whom they might address ...
الصفحة 8
... kind look and gift she had to bestow ; that the individuals of Wyatt's family , for a long time after her death , considered themselves bound in honour to defend the memory of the murdered Queen ; and that one of them when young , had ...
... kind look and gift she had to bestow ; that the individuals of Wyatt's family , for a long time after her death , considered themselves bound in honour to defend the memory of the murdered Queen ; and that one of them when young , had ...
الصفحة 27
... kind . Why then , alas ! doth not she on me rue ? Or is her heart so hard that no pity May in it sink , my joy for to renew ? O stony heart ! who hath thus framed thee So cruel that art clothed with beauty . No grace to me from thee ...
... kind . Why then , alas ! doth not she on me rue ? Or is her heart so hard that no pity May in it sink , my joy for to renew ? O stony heart ! who hath thus framed thee So cruel that art clothed with beauty . No grace to me from thee ...
الصفحة 28
... kind of play , Amid the press of lordly looks to waste ; Hath with it joined oft times such bitter taste , That whoso joys such kind of life to hold In prison joys , fettered with chains of gold . Of the mean and sure estate . Stand ...
... kind of play , Amid the press of lordly looks to waste ; Hath with it joined oft times such bitter taste , That whoso joys such kind of life to hold In prison joys , fettered with chains of gold . Of the mean and sure estate . Stand ...
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Albertus Morton appear beauty born breast bright Canterbury character charms court dear death delight divine dost doth dread Duncombe Earl earth Eclogues ev'ry eyes fair fame fear flame flowers gentle Gentleman's Magazine Giles Fletcher give grace grief groves hand happy hast hath Hawkesworth heart heaven honour John Duncombe John Lilly Kent Kentish King lady learned light live Lord lyre majesty mind muse never Nicholas Amhurst night nymphs o'er pain passion peace Phineas Fletcher plain poem poet poetic poetry pow'r praise pride Queen reign sacred shade shepherds shew shine sighs sight sing Sir Henry Wotton Sir Philip Sidney Sir Thomas Wyatt smile soft song Sonnet soon soul stanza swain sweet tears thee thine thing Thirsil thou thought translation unto verse virtue whilst winds wings writer youth